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Hazel

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Hazel
Studio album by The Red Krayola
Released December 10, 1996
Recorded
Studio


Label Drag City
/

Track listing

No.TitleLength
1."I'm So Blasé"2:31
2."Duck & Cover"1:53
3."Duke of Newcastle"4:14
4."Decaf the Planet"2:12
5."GAO"3:21
6."Larking"3:31
7."Jimmy Two Bad"3:38
8."Falls"4:56
9."We Feel Fine"2:49
10."5123881"2:34
11."Hollywood"1:14
12."Another Song, Another Satan"3:01
13."Boogie"3:58
14."Dad"3:36
15."Father Abraham"4:14
16."Serenade"3:28

Background

The album is named after Mayo Thompson's mother.

Personnel

Like many Red Krayola releases from the 1990s, the credits are listed only alphabetically on the album.

Performers/writers

Michael Baldwin (lyrics?), Werner Büttner (lyrics?), David Grubbs (guitar, piano?), George Hurley (drums?), John McEntire (drums?), Lynn Johnston (bass clarinet?), Albert Oehlen (drum machine, electronics?), Jim O'Rourke (electronics, guitar, bass?), Stephen Prina (keyboard?), Elisa Randazzo (vocals?), Mary Lass Stewart (vocals?), Mayo Thompson (writing, vocals, guitar?), Tom Watson (guitar?)

Cover art

The cover photo is by Khiang Hei. He took it in 1989 in Beijing during the Tiananmen Square student protests.[1]

The packaging design is by Christopher Williams.

Retrospectives

Mayo Thompson, 1997[2]

"We do lots of mail correspondence," he says of his standard method of music by accumulation. "Albert [Oehlen] has a studio in Europe he uses and we send tapes back and forth. We seldom work in the same room, but I accept the conditions as I can. When I was 20 and had a band, we could hang out all day and it would be fun to hang out and play all together at once, but we're all working artists with other agendas as well." So, Thompson writes the lyrics and lays down the basic tracks and then ships them off to his collaborators and waits to hear the results, in what he calls an "additive process," where, as long as he doesn't hear something he "just absolutely cannot stand," he keeps his mouth shut and makes editorial decisions.

Mary Lass Stewart, 1996[3]

Nobody who wanted to exert full control over everything would send tapes around to other people in the band and say, ‘We need some guitar parts. Put stuff down over what's done thus far.' So the work's collaborative in a very thorough sense. Part of the point of Mayo collaborating with so many different people over the years seems to be that he WANTS to be affected by them. It's very brave, I think.

Reviews

Aiding & Abetting

November 18, 1996

Somewhere, Mayo Thompson is the epitome of cheesy pop. Just not in this universe.

This is the latest installment of Thompson's well off-kilter pop sensibilities, as realized with a plethora of friends. The best known, most likely, is Jim O'Rourke, though the names Tom Watson and Lynn Johnston also jump out (though I doubt the golfer and cartoonist, respectively, are the persons involved).

The thing about the Red Krayola (and Thompson's other work) I like the best is that with a subtle shift, this stuff would be slopped up by the Counting Crowes set. Now, I didn't just compare Hazel to such dreck, but I'm just saying a genius can do wonders with subtlety. And certainly Mayo Thompson qualifies there.

Now, I could compare this easily to Roky Erickson, though Thompson generally sticks to more acoustic and sparse arrangements. The concept of mordant psychedelia, though, is a common thread. Indeed, to fully appreciate this music, you really have to separate yourself from this particular plane and reach out toward the sound. This doesn't require drugs (self-hypnosis works much better), but I suppose they wouldn't necessarily hurt.

Hell, the stuff sounds pretty damned amazing even if you're just passively listening. Of course, this is participatory music and the muse demands no less from you, the listener. Hear and obey, O minions of music.

Entertainment Weekly

December 13, 1996[4]

Rob Brunner

Thirty years into a career as a professional weirdo, the Red Krayola's Mayo Thompson has settled into a sort of surrealist lite rock that's far stranger than the noise that usually passes for psychedelia. In Hazel, he mixes gentle guitar; flat, Lou Reed-style vocals; and an assortment of unusual instruments into a blend of familiar elements that seem to have been put together all wrong. In Thompson's hands, though, it all sounds oddly right. A-

Austin Chronicle

December 27, 1996[5]

Greg Beets

Unlike too many of his Sixties brethren, Mayo Thompson of the Red Krayola continues to re-invent his already-singular vision at every step. From the heady Parable of Arable Land days in Houston through his work with Pere Ubu in the early Eighties to his elusive-but-formidable presence on today's Chicago avant music scene, Thompson has always strayed far to the left of convention, finding hidden beauty in the seemingly incongruent. This time out, he enlists the help of debtors such as Gastr Del Sol guitarist David Grubbs and Minutemen/fIREHOSE drummer George Hurley to herd the Krayola's traditional free-form freak-out atmosphere into the form of actual songs in some cases. Although a lot of Hazel is presented in a cut-and-paste carnival of strange narratives, short bursts of guitar/synthesizer, and bold U-turns galore, songs like "I'm So Blasé" and "Larking" capture the same infinite pop energy Chris Bell once reigned in. Makes sense, actually, since a primary tenet of free-form is to throw boundaries out with the bathwater. Thompson refuses to let little inconveniences like time and space get in his way. As a result, his music retains the same obscure vitality it had 20 years ago. 3.0 stars

Addict

1997[6][7]

Gil Kaufman

[...] The latest collection of Thompson's exploding plastic inevitable, entitled Hazel (Drag City), again teams him with younger peers like Gastr Del Sol members David Grubbs and Jim O'Rourke, as well as Tortoise's John McEntire, in addition to former Minutemen drummer George Hurley, Slovenly members Tom Watson and Lynn Johnston, violinist Elisa Randazzo and old friends like German painters Werner Büttner and Albert Oehlen, photographer Hei Han Khiang, visual artists/composers Stephen Prina and Christopher Williams and English teacher Mary Lass Stewart. If the list seems terribly eclectic and skewed more towards the visual arts, that's the way Thompson likes it.

Rolling Stone

February 27, 1997

Elisabeth Vincentelli

Melody Maker

Ben Myers

Billboard

Alternative Press

March 1997

Rocktober

Winter 1997[8]

Alphabetically, Mayo Thompson may be the 13th contributor listed, but he's #1 in our book! Much richer and diverse than the last Crayon-Rock release with a couple of real barnburners in the mix! Sounds like an updated Hatfield and The North.

AllMusic

Richie Unterberger[9]

Mayo Thompson has expressed bemusement at the constant categorization of his work as "quirky." Hazel, however, will do nothing to stem the tide of that adjective showing up in reviews such as this one. The Red Krayola do not seem interested nearly as much in connecting disparate styles as jumbling them. So you'll hear a languid, Lou Reedish drone segue into a John Faheyish guitar pattern backed by weird female vocals, and then a light reggaeish thing about Christian soldiers marching onward. The lyrics are not constructed to make a point, but to reflect the rhythm and fragmented patterns of everyday thought and conversation. It's interesting, but too nonchalantly strange to evoke a passionate response.

References